Well, to began don't take this as a fact!I am only in 8th grade and this is my opinion.
It seems to me that the demon is talking to the ghost/soul of the man on the rock. They are reviewing his life. The demon hides from him when the man is alive, but in contrast has no need to hide from him in his passed state, and seems actually to be acting as a guide/historian in all the things that have passed since the death of the man. The ghost of the man seems to be not at rest, having lived a difficult and conflicted life his spirit does not seemed to have found rest and the demon seems to find humor in the inescapability of the human condition as well as the entirety of the cosmos.
The point of the story seems to come down to the belief that life is short and brutal, but it is LIFE and still preferable to death which is silence that is overwhelming, death is oblivion. The universe consists of nothing more then temporary islands/moments/seconds of stability (life/matter) being in temporary states of cohesion before ceasing and reverting back to silence and cosmic and Normal state which is chaos.
The lynx seems to be chaos, simply knowing, waiting, for the cosmic status qou to return.
because he wan't to scare pople
There are 9 Fable games: . Fable Fable: Coin Golf Fable Heroes Fable 2 Fable 3 Fable 2 Pub Games Fable 4 Fable: The Journey Fable: The Lost Chapters
The definition of a fable is talking animals. If it doesn't have that it is not a fable. a fable doesn't have to have talking animals it doesn't even need to have animals! But I'll tell you what a fable is not...it is not a sandwich
The man in the story or fable - also related to Secret Fable 2 and 3.
Wat fable?
fable 3
fable
It is the message of the fable.
You can't in the original Fable and in Fable the lost chapters but you may have children in Fable 2 which is only out for the xbox 360.
no i don't believe fable will be available on the PC
The possessive form of the noun fable is fable's.example: The children tried to guess the fable's ending.
because fellow is always fable